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Collected Poems - Sri Aurobindo Ashram

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Ilion – Book I 345<br />

Son of the ancient house by the opulent hearth of his fathers,<br />

And at his side like a shadow the grey and ominous Argive.<br />

Happy of light like a lustrous star when it welcomes the morning,<br />

Brilliant, beautiful, glamoured with gold and a fillet of gem-fire,<br />

Paris, plucked from the song and the lyre by the Grecian challenge,<br />

Came with the joy in his face and his eyes that Fate could not alter.<br />

Everachildofthedawnatplaynearaturnofthesun-roads,<br />

Facing destiny’s look with the careless laugh of a comrade,<br />

He with his vision of delight and beauty brightening the earth-field<br />

Passed through its peril and grief on his way to the ambiguous Shadow.<br />

Last from her chamber of sleep where she lay in the Ilian mansion<br />

Far in the heart of the house with the deep-bosomed daughters of Priam,<br />

Noble and tall and erect in a nimbus of youth and of glory,<br />

Claiming the world and life as a fief of her strength and her courage,<br />

Dawned through a doorway that opened to distant murmurs and laughter,<br />

Capturing the eye like a smile or a sunbeam, Penthesilea.<br />

She from the threshold cried to the herald, crossing the marble,<br />

Regal and fleet, with her voice that was mighty and dire in its sweetness.<br />

“What with such speed has impelled from the wind-haunted beaches of<br />

Troas,<br />

Herald, thy car though the sun yet hesitates under the mountains?<br />

Comest thou humbler to Troy, Talthybius, now than thou camest<br />

Once when the streams of my East sang low to my ear, not this Ocean<br />

Loud, and I roamed in my mountains uncalled by the voice of Apollo?<br />

Bringest thou dulcet-eyed peace or, sweeter to Penthesilea,<br />

Challenge of war when the spears fall thick on the shields of the fighters,<br />

Lightly the wheels leap onward chanting the anthem of Ares,<br />

Death is at work in his fields and the heart is enamoured of danger?<br />

What says Odysseus, the baffled Ithacan? what Agamemnon?<br />

Are they then weary of war who were rapid and bold and triumphant,<br />

Now that their gods are reluctant, now victory darts not from heaven<br />

Down from the clouds above Ida directing the luminous legions<br />

Armed by Fate, now Pallas forgets, now Poseidon slumbers?<br />

Bronze were their throats to the battle like bugles blaring in chorus;<br />

Mercy they knew not, but shouted and ravened and ran to the slaughter<br />

Eager as hounds when they chase, till a woman met them and stayed them,<br />

Loud my war-shout rang by Scamander. Herald of Argos,

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